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AD-A274 367111 l liii I l 1111111111 ! l/i'i' i Il'l!
r Operation JUST CAUSE:An Application of Operational Art?
A Monograph
by
Major Timothy D. Bloechl
Military Intelligence
DTIC
JAN 0 4 994
93-31504
School of Advanced Military StudiesUnited States Army Command and General Staff College
Fort Leavenworth, Kansas
9Second Term AY 92-93Approved for Public Release; Distrlbullon is Unlimited /
93 12 28060
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f rorm ApprovedREPORT DOCUMENTATION PAGE OMB No, 0704-0188r
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MAJ TIMOTHY D. BLOECHL
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SCHOOL OF ADVANCED MILITARY STUDIES
MONOGRAPH APPROVAL
DnC Q0 AL,1'II •LNSPE-ttED 5 Acceslon ForNTIS CRA&IDTIC TAB
UnannouncedMajor Timothy D. Bloechl Justification
Tide of Monograph: peration JUST CAUSE: An Application of By
alAn ? Aisribution/Availability Codes
Dist Avail andiorDist ] Special
Approved by: -
Monograph DirectorLTC Ben L. Elley, !
Director, School ofCOl James R. McDonough, MS Advanced Military
Studies
__ __ _ __ ___--_ Director, Graduate
Philip J. Brookes, Ph. D. Degree Program
Accepted this / -- day of 1993(J
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ABSTRACT
OPERATION JUST CAUSE: AN APPLICATION OF OPERATIONAL ART?by Major Timothy D. Bloechl, USA, 65 pages.
This monograph describes the history of the planning and execution ofOperation JUST CAUSE. It focuses on the operation's relationship to thetheory and doctrine of operational art to answer the question: Was OperationJUST CAUSE an application of operational art?
This monograph first summarizes U.S. Army doctrine and selectedtheoretical works on operational art. Next, to understand the strategic andoperational setting within which the military created plans, the paper providesan overview of the crisis in Panama. It emphasizes pre-JUST CAUSE politicaland military actions, and associated military planning efforts, followed by asummary of operational results. The paper then compares Operation JUSTCAUSE planning and execution to doctrine and theory to determine if militaryplanners applied operational art.
This monograph concludes that Operation JUST CAUSE was an excellentapplication of operational art. Its planners apparently understood existingdoctrine and used the art to develop a highly effective operational plan thatattained the desired strategic goals. The planners received the visionaryguidance of three gifted officers, General Thurman, LTG Stiner, and LTGFoss. These officers also benefitted from having leaders in the Joint Chiefs ofStaff and the Bush Administration who gave them their head and did not tinkerwith their plan. The result was a stunning American victory accomplished inshort order with minimum casualties.
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TABLE OF CONTENTSPage
I. Introduction .......... ........................ 1
IH. Doctrine and Theory ........... .................... 5
HIL. Historical Background .......... ................... 14
IV. Doctrinal and Theoretical Evaluation ...... .............. 27
V. Conclusions ........ ........................ .. 41
Appendix 1: Operation Just Cause Task Organization ............ 43Appendix 2: Map of Panama ........ ................. 44
Endnotes ............. ........................... 45
Bibliography ............ .......................... 58
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Military theory and history serve as the chief vehicles with which to
highlight and sketch the essence of operational art.
I. Introduction
The term operational art first appeared in the mid-1920 military
writings and lectures of Soviet General-Major Alexander Andreevich Svechin.
Students and practitioners of military art before Svechin's time divided war
into two distinct levels, strategy and tactics.' Strategy dealt with "the
maneuver of forces to the field of battle," while tactics referred to the
"management of forces on the field of battle." Svechin realized the nature of
war had changed. The size of early 20th Century armies, the increasing
lethality of weapons systems, and the vast territory encompassing the modem
theater of war made it less likely that tactical battles and engagements would
have an immediate impact on strategy.
Svechin studied the Russo-Japanese War (1904-1905), World War I, the
Russian Civil War, and the Russo-Polish War of 1920 to understand how and
why war had changed. His research, aided by the writings of Sigismund von
Schlichting,' led him to believe a third category of military art fell between
strategy and tactics. Other military theorists had long identified operations as
the physical element found between strategic planning and tactical battles.'
Svechin expanded on their work, producing a theory on how to plan and
conduct such operations, aptly titled operational art.'
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Later Soviet writings on the nature of operational art were consistent
with Svechin's views and provide Western students of war an insight into
Soviet (or Russian) definitions and applications of the term. The Soviets
theorized that "operational art [%as] concerned with wartime employment of
operational formations (fronts and armies).. to accomplish the missions
assigned to it [Soviet Armed Forces] by strategy." 7 Operational art also dealt
with the "preparation and conduct of marches, and the movement of
operational formations over large distances." The Soviets believed three
characteristics separated the operational and tactical levels of war. Military
operations conducted at the operational level had a decisive aim, were broad in
scope, and were of a very comp/e nature.' Finally, Soviet operational art
stressed how to conduct operations in a nuclear environment. Soviet emphasis
on army and f-ont level operations on the nuclear battlefiel reflected how they
would have fought a major war with NATO.'
In contrast to the Soviet's longstanding nuclear-based, massive army
approach to operational art, the United States military has only recently
incorporated operational art into its doctrine. Using a combinationrof Soviet
doctrine and independent Western study on the nature of war, the U.S. military
developed its own version of the art.
After the debacle of Vietnam, the U.S. Army searched for a doctrine
that would divert attention from its failures in the war and shore up the
demoralized force. At first the Army emphasized the defense of Europe, a
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more conventional type of warfare, in its 1976 version of FM 100-5.
Offensive-minded critics viewed this defensively dominant publication with
disdain. The manual also "brushed aside the operational level considerations"
of war."
To address the problems in its 1976 manual, the Army published a
revamped FM 100-5 in 1982 that *sharpened appreciation of operational depth
and maneuver to formulate a more fluid doctrine."' 2 The title applied to the
new doctrine was AirL4nd Banke, a more balanced approach to warfighting
featuring a greater integration of air power. In effect, the manual redirected
the Army toward a greater understanding of operational art."3
U.S. Army doctrine continued to evolve into the 1990's. In its 1986
version of AirLand Battle doctrine, the Army maintained its coverage of the
operational level of war. The subsequent demise of the Soviet Union, and
shrinking U.S. defense funding and force structure, drove the Army to
reappraise its doctrinal foundation. Today the final draft of a new version of
FM 100-5, Qrl•alns, places even greater emphasis on infusing operational
art into the Army's vocabulary, thinking, and execution of military
operations. "
The presence of operational art in doctrine does not guarantee its use in
planning and executing military operations. An analysis of contemporary
history provides one way to find out if the Army understands and uses
operational art. A recent U.S. military operation, conducted after the inclusion
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of operational art in FM 100-5, offers one such subject for historical scrutiny.
Operation JUST CAUSE, the 1989 invasion of Panama, was the "biggest U.S.
military operation since Vietnam. *' Following at least seven years of
exposure to doctrinal coverage of operational art, JUST CAUSE architects
should have used the art to plan and execute the operation. Did they? Was
Operation JUST CAUSE an application of operational art?
To answer these questions, this monograph first summarizes U.S. Army
doctrine and selected theoretical works on operational art. Next, to understand
the strategic and operational setting within which the military created plans, the
paper provides an overview of the crisis in Panama. It emphasizes pre-JUST
CAUSE political and military actions, and associated military planning efforts,
followed by a summary of operational results. The paper then compares
Operation JUST CAUSE planning and execution to doctrine and theory to
determine it military planners applied operational art.
To summarize current thought on operational art, the next section of the
monograph draws upon material from three sources: U.S. Army doctrine
contained in the 1993 final draft version of FM 100-5, the theoretical works of
Dr. James J. Schneider of the School of Advanced Military Studies (SAMS),
and finally, the historical writings of Dr. Robert M. Epstein, also from SAMS.
Later, the aspects of operational art provided in this summary serve as criteria
to determine if the military applied operational art to plan and execute
Operation JUST CAUSE.
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II. Doctrine and Theory
Doctrine describes how an army fights. It is a distillation of military
theory and history written in terms of the present, with a view toward the
future. Its formulation considers the current and near-term threat environment,
technology, and the political and military strategies of a nation. As such,
doctrine is evolutionary and should adjust continuously to changes on the world
scene. Finally, doctrine provides a common base of knowledge which
members of a military force use to plan and conduct military operations."6
Today's U.S. Army doctrine reflects the reality of a quickly changing
world. Communism has fallen by the wayside leaving millions of people
smnrggling in a new world of freedom. The United States, facing a reduced
threat of nuclear extinction, is free to cut its expensive military might in this
quickly changing world. Yet, the U.S. wants to ensure its military remains the
dominant power in an uncertain world. This places our military leaders on the
horns of a dilemma-how to reduce the size and cost of the military without
reducing its inherent strength. Army doctrine describes an answer. Based on
a smaller, highly professional force aided by superior technological resources,
the quest is for quick, decisive victory."' Such victory depends largely on the
application of operational art.
In keeping with Clausewitz's dictum that "war is merely the
continuation of policy by other means,"' operational art is dependent on U.S.
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political aims articulated in National Command Authority (NCA) directives and
national strategy documents. In turn, the Chairman, Joint Chiefs of Staff
(CJCS) translates NCA policies requiring the use, or potential use, of military
power into national military strategy. Subject to NCA approval, national
military strategy and derivative taskings provide the basis for action by the
combatant commanders of the armed forces. These commanders then
formulate military strategy for their theater of responsibility. Their level of
operation also represents the junction between the strategic and operational
levels of war, the level at which operational art begins."
FM 100-5, Q iorg, defines operational art as:
the employment of military forces to attain strategic goals in a theaterof war or theater of operations through the design, organization, and executionof campaigns and major operations."
Armed with the NCA's strategic goals (specified and implied), combatant
commanders are responsible for the preparation and, if directed, execution of
campaign and operational plans for their respective theaters. The combatant
commander may direct subunified, component, joint task force, or other
commands to plaf and execute campaigns and major operations. Despite this
delegation, however, the combatant commander retains ultimate responsibility
for execution of the mission."'
The key to initiating plans at the operational level of war directly relates
to the political ends desired by the NCA. The planner's job is much easier
when such ends readily translate into military o, ,ctives (e.g., destroy the
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enemy's military force). If, however, the desired ends fall outside the normal
capabilities of military power, such as to "restore democracy in a country,"
military planners face a more difficult challenge. Furthermore, if the NCA
does not articulate the desired ends, planners must create and revise them until
they are politically acceptable. Therefore, determining the end state and
translating it into military achievable objectives is a critical firt step in
applying operational art.'
Given a defined end state, operational art:
is the process by which methods are selected that determine theapplication and utilization of combat power-the means--to achieve [the) desiredend. I
The methods and means used by the operational artist should ultimately impose
our will on the enemy to achieve the desired end. Understanding the enemy is
crucial in the early planning process. In operational art, the goal is to identify
and defeat (or destroy) the enemy's source of power, otherwise known as his
center of grawity.
In Clausewitz's time, the center of gravity was the armed forces of a
nation. But Clausewitz recognized the manging nature of war might provide
other centers of gravity. These might include the industrial base of a nation or
the will of the enemy populace. Clausewitz also recognized that the different
levels of war may have diverse centers of gravity. For example, the enemy's
political leadership could be a strategic center of gravity, while a particular
element of an enemy's armed force formed the center of gravity at the
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operational level. Also, Clausewitz advocated identifying one's own center of
gravity to protect it against enemy attack."
Clausewitz's concept of "center of gravity* still holds true today and is
an essential element of operational art. The operational artist must identify
both enemy and friendly centers of gravity to properly apply th art.' Once
identified, however, how does the military attack the enemy center of
gravity?
First, careful examination of enemy dispositions, compositions,
doctrine, and other factors should lead to discovering some enemy weakness
that holds the key to defeating his center of gravity. Doctrine refers to this
key as a decisve poim. For an armed force, a decisive point might include the
enemy commander, his command and control apparatus (or cybernetic
function), the will of his troops (moral factors), or some physical weakness
within his force. Attacks against these decisive points may lead to the
disintegration and demoralization of the enemy's military force. Additionally,
like the concept of center of gravity, more than one decisive point may exist.
Planners must identify these decisive points and apply military means against
them to attack the enemy's center(s) of gravity.2
To attack decisive points and defeat the enemy's center of gravity, the
operational artist must design and organize the force."' In other words the
artist must consider the various means and ways available to plan and execute a
given operation. In an unconstrained environment, the planner can use all
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capabilities of an armed force in his deliberations. Such optimum conditions
seldom exist, however, so the planner needs to identify available resources and
organize them effectively to ease operational execution."
Before organizing these available or unconstrained means, the planner
must design the way he intends the campaign or operation to progress. The
operational thought picess relies heavily on geometical concepts developed
by Jomini in the nineteenth century." In a modern sense, these concepts
include:
-identifying the base or bases of operations (those locations fromwhich an army will provide logistical support to the force);
-determining the line or lines of operations directed toward theene-my and linked back to these bases;
-and identifying whether these lines of operation are exrior orinterior and weighing the benefits and costs associated with each type."
With these ideas in mind, the planner must then:
-decide whether to use an indirect or direct approach (or somecombination of the two) to attack the enemy's center of gravity;
-determine the order and transportation method(s) to move theforce to, ind throughout, the theater of operations (deployment andemployment);
-decide how to sequence the actions of the force (operations,battles and/or engagements) to achieve the desired political end state.
-properly balance offensive and defensive operations accordingto the situation.
-determine when and/or where logistics, morale, or attrition willresult in reaching a culminantng point and planning an operational pause beforeieaching that point.
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-and synchronize the means to have a synergistic impact on the
enemy during operational execution.
The above factors serve as the basic elements of design for operational art."
No matter how well a planner thinks he has designed and organized an
operation, it is still subject to risk, friction, and the ever-present fog of war.
Risk may result from an incorrect evaluation of the capabilities of the enemy or
friendly force, the enemy's intentions, or the impact of weather, terrain, and
other factors on the operation. The element of risk also exists when the
planner and his commander realize they have shortfalls in available means and
ways to conduct an operation, assume success despite these shortfalls, and go
forth with the plan.Y
Friction is synonymous with Murphy's Law-anything that can go
wrong will go wrong-and normally when least expected. At the operational
level of war, friction "wastes combat power," particularly when it causes
events that impede the efforts of a force to reach its end state. The fog of war
"is related to" the element of friction. "Fog in war is the obscuration of
reality" and it causes friction "when something untoward has occurred, it is
hidden from view and so passes undetected."
No planner can overcome the effects of risk, friction and the fog of
war, but the correct application of operational art can lessen their impact. By
identifying the risks inherent in an operation, adding flexibility to the plan, and
assessing potential branches and sequels in the wargaming process, planners
can reduce the repercussions these impediments cause on the battlefield.
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The aspects of operational art described above serve as criteria for
assessing whether planners used the art to plan and execute Operation JUST
CAUSE. Today's theorist- of operational art provide additional criteria for use
in this assessment.
Dr. James Schneider proposes operational art, "in its fullest e
... is manifested through several key attibutes."" These attributes include:
the distributed operation, campaign, enemy, and deployment, as well as,
operational vision, instantaneous command and control, continuous logistics,
and an operationally durable formation."
Schneider claims technological advancements in weaponry created the
"empty battlefield," the expansion of forces in width and depth due to the
increasingly lethal effects of firepower. This condition, combined with
improvements in communications and transportation, and the emergence of
huge armed forces during the nineteenth century, were the prerequisites for the
operational level of war, and hence, operational art. The combined effects of
these factors led to a disibuted battlfield-a battlefield expanded in width,
depth, space, and time-today's battlefield."
Decisive battle is no longer possible. Instead, to gain victory, an army
is forced to conduct deep maneuvers and a series of battles "extended in space
and time'"-the dlurribued operadion. Although Schneider allows that one
major operation may achieve strategic vicmry, the norm is a distributed
campaign consisting of several distributed operations. These conditions also
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require continuous mobilization, or distiued deployment, by the warring
parties. As war expands in time, and nations lose their young in battle, there
is a requirement to regenerate the force indefinitely.34
The distributed operation, campaign, and deployment require continuous
logistics. This attribute of operational art means to sustain an armed force's
"*movement tempo' and force density.*" In other words, continuous logistics
is the ability to supply guns and butter to an army indefinitely, at least until
one side or the other is physically or morally exhausted. Continuous logi~ucs
leads to the maintenance of an operationally durable formation; a military
force capable of fighting indefinitely, dependent on the provision of trained and
equipped replacme personnel.'
Additionally, the commander and his staff must have operational
vision-an ability to see beyond the first battle into the future. This attribute of
operational art involves planning the campaign or operation completely,
anticipating the different paths the war may follow. Operational vision implies
a strong "mental agility," characterized by the *ability to react to incoming
information faster than it arrives. "I Inherent to this process are instantaneous
communications. An army engaged in operational art must quickly receive and
transmit information across the entire theater of war.4
Finally, operational art requires the existence of a distinted enemy.
Schneider describes this enemy as one whom is similarly "trained, equipped,
structured, and commanded as the friendly force.""' The distributed enemy,
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and the preceding attributes of operational art developed by Dr. Schneider,
provide further criteria for assessing the application of operational art during
Operation JUST CAUSE.
Dr. Robert Epstein, while concurring with much of Schneider's thesis,
articulates a slightly different view of operational art theory, one less
predicated on changes in technology. Viewing war through his own unique
historical lens, Epstein proposes two additional factors make operational art
what it is today. First, the execution of operational art requires attaining air
superiority." Although this claim is questionable when one considers the trials
and tribulations of the Vietnam War (albeit including a constrained and
inconsistent air campaign), it is worthy of consideration vis-a-vis Operation
JUST CAUSE. Finally, Epstein believes "operational art is the means by
which favorable battle situations are created.`s In other words, the correct
application of operational art, during planning, should make operational
execution a certainty.'
The preceding summary is not all inclusive. It does, however, provide
useful criteria for assessing whether JUST CAUSE planners applied operational
art. Before conducting the assessment, this monograph provides an overview
of the political and militarily significant events associated with the development
of the operation. The next section places particular emphasis on the military
planning activities occurring at various stages of the two and one-half year
crisis. The section concludes with a summary of the execution phase of the
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operation.
MI. Historical Background
In June 1987, General Manuel Antonio Noriega, the head of the
Panamanian Defense Forces (PDF) and de facto ruler of Panama, had a
problem. A mihltary rival, Colonel Roberto Diaz Herrera, accused Noriega of
murdering a rival political contender, using Panama as a base of operations for
drug smuggling, and election fraud. The U.S. government, which had a
"quasi-colonial relationship with Panama dating from its [Panama's)
independence in 1903,"' took swift action against Noriega. The U.S.
discontinued military assistance to the PDF, called for the establishment of
democracy in Panama, and began to pursue a policy of *unreserved opposition
to Noriega. "
General Frederick Woerner, the Commander-in-Chief, United States
Southern Command (USCINCSO), realized the Panamanian crisis meant a
drastic change in U.S. militry strategy toward Panama. The existing U.S.-
Panamanian joint military plan designed to protect the Panama Canal,
Operation Plan (OPLAN) 6000-86, was obsolete. Woerner directed his staff to
rework OPLAN 6000-86 assuming 'a hostile, rather than a neutral or friendly,
PDF."' Southern Command (SOUTHCOM) dubbed the new plan
ELABORATE MAZE, thus beginning the planning process that would lead to
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Operation JUST CAUSE two and one-half years later.'
Faced with mounting internal and external pressure, Noriega, whom
Woerner called the "world's master in... the judicious use of intimidation,'
avoided provocative actions and the initial crisis subsided. In February 1988,
however, the uneasy calm in Panama was suddenly broken. Two U.S. federal
grand juries unexpectedly indicted Noriega on drug trafficking charges.
Panamanian and U.S. citizens called for Noriega's ouster. In answer to their
pleas, Eric Delvalle, the nominal President of Panama, attempted to fire
Noriega, but instead, lost his own position. President Reagan c ,,';zeJd by
imposing selected economic sanctiGns, while the U.S. Congress and State
Department pressed for further action against Noriega. In March, several
members of the PDF attempted a coup, but Noriega swiftly regained control
and purged the PDF of those considered disloyý,. Noriega's opponents
organized street demonstrations and a general strike, but again he ruthlessly
restored order, this time with PDF intervention.52
The growing unrest in Panama forced President Reagan to increase
pressure on Noiega. He imposed greater economic sanctions and ordered the
deployment of an additional 1,300 military personnel to Panama to bolster
security in the country. Using the additional force as a bargaining chip, he
offered to remove the drug charges against Noriega if the Panamanian stepped
down. Negotiations failed and the U.S. S,,ate blocked an attempt by Reagan
to use covert action against Noriega. With presidential elections approaching
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in the fall, Reagan opted to take no further action and the crisis became a
stalemate."3
U.S. military activity intensified during this crisis period. Per JCS
directives in February and March, "SOUTHCOM and its components began
contingency planning in a crisis action mode."" Planners reworked
ELABORATE MAZE into a new set of plans called the PRAYER BOOK.
Woerner activated a Joint Special Operations Task Force (JSOTF) at Hurlburt
Field, Florida. Additionally, as his staff was too small to carry the extra
planning load, Woerner activated Joint Task Force-Panama (JTF-P) out of
U.S. Army South resources to "coordinate security operations, engage in
[tactical] contingency planning and manage day-to-day tactical aspects of the
crisis. *"
The PRAYER BOOK series of plans gave policymakers four different
military options. ELDER STATESMAN (later POST TIME) provided for the
defense of the Panama Canal and U.S. military installations and civilians. In
case of an increased threat to U.S. citizens in Panama, the military could
conduct a noncombatant evacuation operation, code-named KLONDIKE KEY.
BLUE SPOON was an offensive operation, while KRYSTAL BALL (renamed
BLIND LOGIC) provided ways to restore the Panamanian government should
it collapse. SOUTHCOM retained the planning lead for BLIND LOGIC,
while tasking JTF-P to plan the other operations.*
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PRAYER BOOK's key plan was BLUE SPOON. It called for the
gradual, massive buildup of U.S. forces in Panama. The aim of the plan was
to escalate the pressure on the PDF to the point where they would feel
compelled to overthrow Noriega. The plan would use elements of: the 7th
Infantry Division (Light) based at Fort Ord, California; a Marine
Expeditionary Brigade from Camp Pendleton, California; an aircraft carrier
battle group off each coast of Panama; and the 82nd Airborne Division from
Fort Bragg, North Carolina, the force reserve. Woerner, and then CJCS
Admiral William Crowe, decided to use the force buildup option. They felt
the large presence of U.S. citizens in Panama ruled out a quick, surprise
attack. Furthermore, Woerner believed coordinated interagency efforts by
Washington against the Noriega regime would end the crisis without use of
force."
LTG John W. Foss, the commander of XVIII Airborne Corps at Fort
Bragg, lacked confidence in SOUTHCOM's plan. His corps was the U.S.
Army's rapid response contingency force, yet he had only a coordination role
in the planning effort. Foss and his staff felt the plan had many weaknesses.
Primarily, it allowed the PDF time to build up defenses or move to the jungle
to prolong any potential fight. Additionally, corps planners felt the JTF-P staff
was too undermanned to plan and execute the opefation, the force deployment
was too unwieldy, and the plan's objectives were unclear. They also believed
the plan lacked a joint flavor, particularly in its lack of airspace management.
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Furthermore, corps personnel thought the plan too detailed, allowed little
flexibility to subordinate commanders, and had too many targets (40-50).
Because of these concerns, Foss ordered his staff to quietly prepare its own
plan for offensive operations in Panama.
Tensions in Panama eased throughout the remainder of 1988 and into
the winter of 1989. The newly elected U.S. President, George Bush,
continued to hold a hard line against Noriega, but took no further concerted
action against him. Hopeful that Panamanian elections scheduled for May
1989 would lezd to a government able to control Noriega, the U.S.
government let political and diplomatic sanctions work their course.
The elections in May triggered another eruption of the crisis. Before
the elections, the Bush Administration, wary of possible election manipulation
by Noriega, announced "it would consider- new diplomatic, intelligence, and
military options" if fraudulent elections occurred." Noriega failed to heed the
U.S. warning. Not only did he attempt to rig the elections, but he also
declared the elections invalid when his opponents managed to win. Subsequent
demonstrations by members of the opposition turned violent. Noriega
unleashed elements of his paramilitiry Dignity Battalions and Doberman Riot
Police on the crowd. Noriega's thugs injured the opposition presidential
candidate and one of his running mates in the melee.'
Angered by Noriega's disregard for the democratic process, and
concerned for the lives of U.S. citizens in Panama, President Bush responded
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quickly. He recalled the Ambassador to Panama, cut the embassy staff, and
called upon the Organization of American States (OAS) to place pressure on
Noriega and negotiate his resignation. Additionally, he authorized execution of
Operation BLADE JEWEL. This operation moved "all U.S. employees and
their dependents to safe housing,* and reduced the number of these dependents
in Panama.6" Furthermore, he ordered execution of Operation NIMROD
DANCER, an emergency deployment of 2,000 additional combat forces to
Panama, including U.S. marines and elements of two U.S. Army divisions.
This force constituted partial execution of the SOUTHCOM POST TIME
plan.a
Military planning actions again intensified. Commanders and staffs
conducted crisis reevaluation of the PRAYER BOOK plans expecting
immediate execution of many, if not all the plans. XVIII Airborne Corps
planners continued to question the teasibility of BLUE SPOON and were
beginning to gain support firom JTF-P, SOUTHCOM, and JCS. As tensions
began to subside by the end of May, JTF-P integrated NIMROD DANCER
units into BLUE SPOON, and planners concentrated on refining the offensive
plan."
Noriega disregarded the military posturing around him and intensified
his psychological attacks on U.S. personnel in Panama. SOUTHCOM noted
an increase in Panamanian violations of U.S.-Panamanian treaties and
harassment of American personnel. Clearly sanctions were not working.
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Noriega was simply turning to others, such as the drug cartels and Cuba, for
support. In Washington, "there was unanimity of opinion that Noriega was
contrary not only to Panamanians interests, but also [U.S.] interests." The
problem was that the Departments of State and Defense could not agree on the
appropriate course of action to take. State favored military intervention while
Defense argued for continued political and economic sanctions. As each of the
latter measures failed to work, the U.S. moved toward military action.65
The tempo of U.S. military activity increased during the summer. The
U.S. initiated tactical show-the-flag operations, called SAND FLEA's,
designed to exercise U.S. treaty rights. In reality, these operations also
prepared units for their specific combat roles under BLUE SPOON, while
desensitizing the PDF to U.S. activities, and exercising command and control
procedures and systems. Additionally, JTF-P initiated joint exercises,
code-named PURPLE STORM's, to improve Army, Air Force, and Marine
coordination under the plan. Furthermore, BLUE SPOON faced drastic
revision. Apparently displeased with General Woerner, the Bush
Administration announced his "retirement" on July 22, 1989 and dlamed his
replacement, General Maxwell Thurman. By the time he took command in
October, Thurman had made sweeping changes to the way U.S. forces would
intervene in Panama later in 1989.0
Before hb took command, Thurman made it clear to XVIII Airborne
Corps planners that they would lead planning and execution of BLUE SPOON.
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He also stressed that he did not like the present plan. The XVIII Airborne
Corps plan, OPLAN 90-1, held in abeyance under the Woerner regime,
suddenly came to the forefront. Gone was the requirement to use U.S. Navy
aircraft carriers and a Marine Expeditionary Brigade. Also dropped was the
long buildup of forces required by BLUE SPOON. In its place was a plan
designed to put massive force on the ground in Panama virtually overnight.
This required the use of America's most rapid contingency force, the 82d
Airborne Division. The 7th Infantry Division (Light) was subsequently
dropped as the primary BLUE SPOON force; however, it did remain in the
plan for use in subsequent operations."
Other problems with BLUE SPOON disappeared. A new aviation task
force consolidated Army helicopter assets, thus decreasing airspace
coordination difficulties. Coordination increased between the corps and Air
Force planners to jointly unite air efforts and decrease airspace problems even
further. LTG Carl W. Stiner, now the Commander, XVIII Airborne Corps,
facilitated integration of special operations plans into OPLAN 90-1. Stiner, as
a former commander of the Joint Special Operptons Command (JSOC), knew
special operations doctrine and the players involved in these types of
operations. He was just the right man wo pull the conventional and
unconventional forces together in the plan. As OPLAN 90-1 neared
completion in early October 1989, events in Panama would change it again."
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General Thurman and General Colin Powell took their new posts as
CINCSO and CJCS respectively on October 1st. Two days later, on October
3d, a PDF Major attempted another coup to topple Noriega. While Thurman
and Powell pondered what to do, troops loyal to Noriega squelched the ill-fated
attempt. Congress chastised the American generals for not vigorously aiding
the coup plotmts, although-both military leaders doubted the coup would have
succeeded, even with U.S. help. The coup attempt did serve to clarify the
enemy situation in Panama for BLUE SPOON planners. Quick responses by
some PDF units, and a lack of response by others, changed the intelligence
picture. OPLAN 90-1 and BLUE SPOON target priorities changed
accordingly.*
Planning and preper 4ations for executing the BLUE SPOON plan
intensihied following the coup attempt. Generals Thurman and Stiner, and
their .staffs, held several coordination meetings to iron out planning details. By
Nowember 3d, XVIII Airborne Corps had rewritten OPLAN 90-1, renamed
OPLAN 90-2, and had obtained SOUTHCOM and JCS approval of the
do&x.unt. USSOUTHCOM updated the BLUE SPOON plan, USCINCSO
Operations Order (OPORD) 1-90, accordingly. The new plan assumed the
PDF would react to an American intervention in a way similar to that seen
during the coup. Additionally, the JSOTF, since its activation as a separate
cowmand under USCINCSO, now f 'I under Stiner's control."
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To execute OPLAN 90-2, XVIII Airborne Corps, renamed Joint Task
Force-South (JTFSO) by the plan, would control numerous forces from
Panama and CONUS. U.S. Army South, the 82d Airborne Division, and the
7th Infantry Division (Light), formed the core of U.S. Army assets under
JTFSO control. This ground force also included U.S. Marine elements
stationed in Panama. Elements of 12th Air Force, with assets scattered
throughout CONUS, would provide air support to the operation. Additionrially,
Panama-based ur assets, JSOTF AC-130 gunships, and Military Airlift
Command (MAC) units, rounded out the OPLAN 90-2 support force. Finally
JSOTF, using the 75th Ranger Regiment, U.S. Navy SEAL teams, U.S. Army
Special Operations assets, and elements of the secretive Joint Special
Operations Command, would contrbute to both conventional and
unconventional operations." (See Appendix I for a partial JTFSO Task
Organization).
JTFSO would face PDF units vastly inferior in training, equipment,
strength, and general military capabilities, yet, the Panamanian force
represented a potential long-lerm threat. The PDF consisted of approximately
19,600 personnel, of which 6,000 were in the active force. Its army consisted
of two infantry battalions, ten separate infantry companies, a cavalry squadron,
and a special forces antite=orist unit called the UESAT (Unidad Especial de
Seguridad Antiterror). Major equipment in the army inventory included
armored cars and 60mm mortars, but no tanks. The PDF air force had only
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400 personnel, 38 fixed-wing aircraft and 17 helicopters (all unarmed), and an
assortment of air defense guns. The force was rounded off with a brown-water
navy that had a few patrol craft. Besides this meager force, Noriega had
developed an unknown number of Dignity Battalions, nicknamed Digbats by
the U.S. troops. Ill-equipped and ill-led, this rabble of criminals and thugs,
loyal to Noriega for the money he gave them, posed an unpredictable threat to
both U.S. military and civilian personnel.7
Despite their seemingly inferior state, PDF and Digbat capabilities
greatly concerned U.S. military planners. The so-called PLANAMONTANA
called for the PDF "to take to the mountains to conduct guerrilla warfare""
against the Americans. Should the PDF do so, planners envisioned a longer,
more difficult operation to root them out of the dense Panamanian jungle.
Other PDF plans, code-named GENESIS and EXODUS, dealt with UESAT
and Digbat schemes to kidnap Americans and hold them hostage in the interior
of the country." Finally, as OPLAN 90-2 assumed a minimal air defense
threat to U.S. forces, there wa. some concern that the PDF had acquired SA-7
missile systems.- If true, this weapon posed a significant threat to the plethora
of U.S. aircraft planned for the operation."
With these "worst case" scenarios in mind, OPLAN 90-2 forces readied
themselves for combat throughout November and early December 1989.
Stateside Army, Air Force, and JSOTF units conducted many exercises built
around OPLAN 90-2. Military units in Panama conducted an increased
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number of SAND FLEA and PURPLE STORM exercises tied to the new plan.
Additionally, a bomb threat in Panama in mid-November led to the premature
activation of JTFSO. As a result, JTFSO and SOUTHCOM practiced
communications procedures, conducted detailed Command Post Exercises
(CPXs), and increased intelligence coverage of the enemy. Finally,
SOUTHCOM preposioned several combat systems in Panama including
M-551 Sheridan tanks, AH-64 Apache helicopters, and selected JSOTF assets.
U.S. forces were ready for action. All they required was an execution order.'
In mid-December 1989, the U.S.-Panama crisis reached its climax. On
the 15th, the Panamanian National Assembly, in a televised session, declared
Noriega "maximum leader of national liberation,' named him 'chief of
government," and added that "the Republic of Panama is declared to be in a
state of war while the aggression [by the U.S.] lasts.'" Events quickly went
out of control. On the 17th, a U.S. Marine lieutenant was shot and killed at a
PDF roadblock. The PDF arrested, interrogated, and roughed up a U.S. Navy
lieutenant and his wife who had witnessed the shooting."
Concerned for the safety of U.S. citizens, who had been subjected to
over 2,000 incidents of PDF harassment in the preceding two years," and
aware of possible planned attacks by Dignity Battalion elements against U.S.
housing areas, President Bush decided to act. On Sunday, December 18,
1989, the NCA ordered execution of USCINCSO OPORD 1-90 (BLUE
SPOON), and its subordinate OPLAN 90-2. JCS set H-Hour for 0100 hours,
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Eastern Standard Time, December 20, 1989. The operation was renamed
JUST CAUSE.0
With a revised H-Hour of 0045, U.S. forces invaded Panama from
within and without on the 20th. In a massive, joint assault involving Rangers,
irborne units, special q -wam eleeants, Air Force airlift and mike aircraft,
and a host of other forces, Amria uits struck 27 tar during the night.
By mid-aternoon, it was clear the operation was a maor success. The PDF
ceased to exist as a cohesive figh fbrce, its leadr was on the run, and a
new, democratic governuat emrI in Puama.."
Over the next few days, the Americans restored law and order within
Pansma City and Colon, reed Ann t= aim ostage by sna9l m bers of
PDF and Dignity Bataion forces, d began c operati iwo the
remainder of the country. While these operatiu onsrnti nnF I until earty
February 1990, no significaot resistance challenged U.S. military might. On
the 24th, Noriega sought refuge in the Vatican Embassy in Panama City.
Later, when Noriega left the building, U.S. authrities arrested him and sent
him to jail in the United States. Eveumnaly peie reFnrend to Panama and, on
January 31, 1990, the JCS declared an end to Operation JUST CAUSE.*
Almost immediately, the U.S. military begpn ntion-bidi operations
in Panama. A dusted-off version of OPORD BLIND LOGIC, pulled from the
original PRAYER BOOK series of plans, provided the basis for these
operations, now code-named PROMOTE LIBERTY. Conducted
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simultaneously with JUST CAUSE, PROMOTE LIBERTY seemed
disorganized and ineffective at first- For example, command and control of
the effort did not stabiilize until Januay 23d when the U.S. Military Support
Group-Panama took control of the operation. Eventually the operaton helped
the Panamanian peopl in their qoest to resre democracy in their country-an
effort, that condiome tday.0
Having reviewed the backgound of the planning and execution of
Operation JUST CAUSE, this momWaph reta to the cental question: Was
Operation JUST CAUSE an application of operational art? The next section
compares the doctrinal and theoretical ctiteri eso~lished in Section 11 to the
history of the operatioin to find the inswes.
TV. Doctrinl aud Theoretical Eautt
To determine if JUST CAUSE was an application of operatioal art,
this section begins by comparing the operatio to the doctrina~l defiition of
operational art. It then addesses the design and oxrguizatIo of the operation
in terms of the criteri identified in Section U. Finally, this section concludes
by evaluating JUST CAUSE against Schneider's attritmtes of operational art
and Epstein's view of the art today.
The doctrinal definition of operational art requires planners to design,
organize, and execute campaigns and major operations to attain strategic
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goals." For JUST CAUSE to be an application of operational art it follows
that the operation must be a campaign or major operation tied to strategic
goals.
At a minimum, Operation JUST CAUSE was a major military
operation. It required the use of a4pproximately 12,000 troops based in
Panama" and an additional 14,000 within the first 24 hours." This force
included elements of all U.S. military services and involved the support of five
Unified & Specified Commands during its execution, as well as assistance from
several U.S. governmental departments and Department of Defense agencies."
In effect, JUST CAUSE was an invasion by U.S. forces into the tenitory of a
sovereign nation, without that nation's initial consent, to impose U.S. will on
its people.
Despite previously ambiguous policy toward Panama, U.S. political and
military objectives for Operation JUST CAUSE were clear and consistent from
the strategic to the tactical levels of war. The Bush Administration stated four
goals for the operation:
to protect American lives, restore the democratic process [inPanama], preserve the integrity of the Panama Canal treaties and apprehendManuel Noriega.8
To attain these, political goals, the USSOUTHCOM BLUE SPOON plan
translated them into the following broad strategc military objectives:
The removal of Noriega from power and Panama, the removalof Noriega's cronies and accomplices from office, the creation of a PDFresponsive to and supportive of an emergent democratic government of Panama[GOP], and a freely elected GOP which is allowed to govern."
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USSOUTHCOM planners then linked these objectives (ends) to general
operational missions (ways) by stating:
To accomplish these objectives U.S. forces must: protect U.S.lives and property; exercise U.S. treaty rights and responsibilities; defend thecanal; be prepared to support Panamanian initiatives with military operations;and be prepared on order to capture Noriega, capture key Nonegaaccomplices, fix the PDF, and neutralize the PDF. Additionally, U.S. forcesmust be prepared to rescue any USCITs [U.S. citibensl detained by the PDFand to conduct restoration of law and order operations. U.S. forces must beprepared to conduct all missions simultaneously and to assist the emergentgovernment of Panama in stabilization operations on the completion of combatoperations.0
BLUE SPOON also allocated responsibility for planning and executing
these operational missions. The plan tasked JTF-South, along with the JSOTF
and other component commands, to perform combat-related activities. These
included the capture of Noniega and other PDF leaders, the neutralization of
the PDF, and the defense of U.S. citizens, U.S. installations, and the Panama
Canal. Absent from these taskings was the requirement to conduct
"stabilization operations." The plan simply referred its readers to the BLIND
LOGIC plan for further information."'
While BLUE SPOON translated political and strategic military
objectives into operational missions, JTF-South OPLAN 90-2 served to link
these missions to tactical military actions. The plan's mission statement read:
When directed, XV1II Abn Corps, as JTF SOUTH (JTFSO),conducts operations in the JOA (Joint Operations Area] to protect U.S. lives,secure key sites/facilities, and neutralize the PDF; prepares to restore law andorder, and support installat'on of a U.S.-recognized government in Panama.On order, redeploy as directed."
The plan tasked JSOTF to capture Noriega and other key PDF leaders, to
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rescue any persons detained by the PDF, and to conduct other direct action and
special reconnaissance missions. Other combat missions, such as neutralizing
the PDF and defending U.S. installations and key Panamanian facilities, fell to
conventional forces'1 Having established that JUST CAUSE was a major
operation designed to attain swtegic objectives, this pape next assesses the
operation in terms of its design and organization using the criteria listed in
Section If.
While BLUE SPOON and OPLAN 90-2 do not specifically use the term
center of gravity, commanders and planners clearly identified enemy centers of
gravity in the planning process. Geneial Thurman saw Noriega as the strategic
enemy center of gravity. As long as the PDF leader remained in power, he
could still serve as a "rallying point" for the Panamanian militzry and the
Dignity Battalions." General Stiner agreed with the CINC's assessment. He
believed most of the Panamanian people wanted democracy. Noriega and his
PDF stood in their way. Therefore, he felt U.S. forces had to go "for the
head of the snake [Noriegal at the same time you go for his power base [the
PDF]. I In this regard, in purely Clausewitzian terms, the enemy armed
forces became the operational center of gravity.
Although the source documents do not mention friendly centers of
gravity, one can derive a potential friendly center of gravity by considering the
main concerns of JUST CAUSE authors. As long as the PDF stayed out of
the jungle, it was felt U.S. forces could quickly neutralize them. If, however,
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the PDF executed their so-called PLANAMONTANA, planners feared a longer
and more costly fight would follow. Additionally, planners were concerned
that the PDF would take American citizens hostage. Confronted with a
potential war in the jungle and the possible kidnaping of U.S. civilians, one
can surmise that Americans might criticize the operation. As U.S. deaths
mounted, images of Vietnam might surface among the American people.
Therefore, if there was a friendly center of gravity during Operation JUST
CAUSE, it was the will of the American people. To protect this center of
gravity, U.S. forces had to attack quickly and violently to fix and neutralize
the PDF and minimize the threat to Americans in Panama."
To deise a plan to accomplish this, planners analyzed the enemy
centers of gravity to identify appropriate decisive points to attack. At the
strategic level, Noriega was both the decisive point and center of gravity. His
capture and removal from Panama was the overall key to success. At the
operational level, selected units of the PDF, based on activity observed during
the October 1989 coup attempt, rose in importance as they appeared critical to
any attempts by the opposition to thwart a U.S. invasion. Targeting these
forces was an essential part of the attack plan, but another way existed to keep
them out of the fight. Planners determined that the PDF command and control
(C2) system was the decisive point to attack the operational center of gravity.
Disabling PDF C2 would allow U.S. forces to face an essentially leaderless
foe.
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The next planning step was to identify the forces required to do the job.
General Stiner's superiors did not constrain him in developing the force
structure (or means) to accomplish the mission. The U.S. was not involved in
any other major military operations during this period, and the quest to topple
Noriega was clearly at the top of the Bush Administration's agenda. These
factors, coupled with the support of USSOUTHCOM and JCS, gave Stiner
virtually a free hand in designing his command."
Stiner and his planners did face two limitations in deploying and
employing any selected force. Strategic and theater airlift was not
unconstrained. Stiner's staff had to tailor the CONUS-based force package to
varying estimates of aircraft availability and sortie generation rates.
Additionally, the USSOUTHCOM helicopter fleet was small. This necessitated
infiltrating Army aviation assets to Panama, constrained by existing hangar
space at Howard Air Force Base."
The other key factor that limited Stiner's employment of combat forces
was the desire to minimize casualties, both civilian and military. Most of the
Panamanian population was pro-U.S., but extensive civilian casualties during
an invasion might quickly erode their support. Additionally, the large number
of U.S. citizens in Panama, although reduced during Operation BLAD&
JEWEL, further restricted the amount of force the military could use. Planners
also realized that the PDF was tha police force in Panama and controlled most
of the government's bureaucracy. Destruction of the PDF meant eradicating
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"the only real national institution in Panama."'" A future democratic
Panamanian government would depend on using members of the former PDF
to keep the nation running, therefore, neutralizing the enemy was preferred to
defeating or destroying him.10°
Because of the desire to minim casualties, planners had to devise
highly restrictive rules of engagement (ROE)."' For example, unobserved fire
was severely limited and use of indirect fire weapons in built-up areas required
the *approval of the ground commander in grade 0-5 (Lieutenant Colonel) or
above."'t OPLAN 90-2 provided a nine-page appendix on ROE to cover the
initial combat phase of the operation, and modifications occurred continuously
as the U.S. force transitioned from combat to stability operations.10,
Despite restrictive ROE arid limited airlift, planners were blessed with
the existence of multiple, U.S. controlled bases of operation in Panama, and
added another for good measure. The U.S. occupied several major facilities in
Panama on both the Pacific and Atlantic sides of the Panama Canal. Among
them, USSOUTHCOM Headquarters, at Quarry Heights, offered a
commanding view of the PDF headquarters complex, the Commandancia.
Additionally, U.S. forces shared several installations with elements of the
PDF. Of principal concern to JTF-South planners was Howard Air Force
Base. This C-5 capable air base was vulnerable to PDF mortar fire from the
surrounding jungle. To provide a secondary airfield for the invading force,
planners decided seizure of Torrijos International Airport (located east of
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Panama City) was necessary. This target provided an additional benefit to the
U.S. force. Seizing Torrijos also required securing the adjacent Tocumen
Airfield, the largest PDF air base."
BLUE SPOON and OPLAN 90-2 also required deployment of CONUS-
based units from several locations in the United States. Staging areas included:
Fort Bragg, Fort Lewis, Fort Benning, Fort Stewart, Fort Polk, and Fort Ord.
Aerial ports of debarkation included the following U.S. Air Force bases: Pope
(next to Fort Bragg), Charleston, Hurlburt Field, and Travis. Additionally,
forces deployed from Hunter Army Airfield and a civilian airfield in
Monterey, California. 11
Using this wide variety of CONUS and Panamanian bases of operation,
and means limited only by available airl planners were free to develop a
highly complex plan. They used both interior and exterior lines of operation to
plan attacks against a total of 27 H-Hour targets.'O For example, Ranger
battalions deployed from the U.S. on exterior lines would conduct airborne
assaults to attack Torrijos Airport and a PDF installation at Rio Hato in
western Panama. Elements of the 193d Infantry Brigade, on the other hand,
were to road-march from Fort Clayton, Panama on interior lines to attack
targets in western Panama City.`
The number and variety of U.S. forces designated for the initial
H-Hour strikes allowed for execution of both offensive and defensive missions.
The plan earmarked some forces to attack PDF C2 facilities, unit garrisons,
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and air and naval sites. Other U.S. elements were tasked to block road
intersections, secure key bridges and sites along the Panama Canal, and defend
U.S. installations and housing areas. Planners selected units to execute these
tasks by matching force capabilities with mission requirements.'"0
Stiner's staff used both direct and indirect approaches to neutralize the
enemy in the plan. Planned surgi-al attacks against known Noriega residences
were clearly examples of using a direct approach. In hindsight, as Noriega
eluded capture until December 24, 1989, attacks against these locations
indirectly stymied his movements. "JSOTF conducted more than forty
operations across Panama aimed at snatching Noriega" before he surfaced on
the 24th."' Direct attacks against forces at the Commandancia and the PDF
garrison on Fort Amador also served as indirect attacks against the PDF as a
whole. These two facilities were Noriega's principal C2 nodes for controlling
the PDF. As such, these targets together formed the decisive point to attack
the enemy's operational center of gravity-the PDF. Additionally, JTF-South
planned electronic warfare and psychological operations throughout the
operation to reduce the PDF's will to resist and bolster Panamanian public
opinion toward the U.S."'
The simultaneous attack by U.S. forces against the 27 H-Hour targets
was designed to produce a synergistic impact upon the PDF. Attacking at
night, surprising the enemy, and using a combination of firepower, maneuver,
and psychological operations, JTF-South hoped to "lay on top of them [the
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PDFJ with overwhelming combat power so that they [couldn't) run away Itol
fight another day.'" 2 As the operation unfolded, it was clear General Stiner
and his planners achieved the desired effect. Within the first 24 hours of
Operation JUST CAUSE the PDF lost cohesion, was demoralized, and quickly
disintegrated as a functional fighting force."
Stiner and his charges did accept some risk with OPLAN 90-2. They
planned for no operational pause, believing the PDF incapable of forcing the
U.S. force to a culminating point. (They did plan for branches and sequels,
and issued daily frag nentary orders (FRAGORDs) to adjust the plan to the
changing situation.)"' JTF-South couldn't possibly protect all U.S. citizens at
the start of the operation; thus, the risk of the PDF seizing hostages remained
high. Operational surprise was also a critical factor in the plan. Increased
activity at Howard Air Force Base in the days before H-Hour, speculation
concerning a possible invasion on U.S. television broadcasts, and other
violations of operational security risked exposing the operation before it began.
These factors aside, American commanders had confidence in the plan and
judged the risks small."'
In retrospect, friction and the fog of war had some impact on U.S.
execution of the plan. The PDF learned of the attack and began mobilizing
forces before the invasion began, prompting Stiner to revise H-Hour.il
Elements of the 82d Airborne Division missed their trol, zone and landied in a
swamp. As a result, scheduled attacks by this force against their H-Hour
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targets were pushed back into daylight hours, possibly adding to the unit's
casualties."t ' U.S. forces tracking Noriega lost his trail just before the
invasion, resulting in days of search operations and diversion of combat forces
until he surfaced on 24 December."' Despite these and other miscues, a
robust U.S. C2 network (discussed later) enabled JTF-South to significantly
reduce the fog of war.
In summary, the planning and execution of Operation JUST CAUSE
meets the definition of operational art contained in FM 100-5. Planners used
the elements of operational design described in Section II to meet strategic
objectives with a major U.S. military operation. This paper next turns to the
theory of operational art to determine if Schneider's and Epstein's criteria
were met as well.
The U.S. military conducted operations in Panama on a distributed
battlefield. The PDF could not concentrate or scatter to the jungle. Instead, a
massive U.S. force struck multiple targets, spread throughout Panama, on a
single night. Subsequent operations throughout Panama into February 1990,
and concurrent stability and nation-building operations, combine to depict
JuSn CAUSE as a distributed operation.
Operation JUST CAUSE was a major, U.S. contingency operation and
therefore is an example of the exception Schneider allowed for when defining
the distributed campaign. Despite distributed operations into Panama's
interior, the Americans essentially neutralized the PDF within the first few
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days of the operation. The stability phase of the operation, and the
simultaneous execution of Operation PROMOTE LIBERTY, might lead one to
view these operations in total as a campaign. Such a view is debatable,
however, due to the disjointed execution of these operations and the lack of
planning for them by JTF-South."'
Although the scale of JUST CAUSE does not compare with many of
America's major wars, the military did enjoy continuous logistics and
mobilization, even if on a reduced scale. Units benefitted from in-country
logistics stocks and daily resupply flights from CONUS.'" One commander
claimed, "if we asked for it, we got it [and] we got it quickly."21 The size of
the operation did not warrant major mobilization efforts, however, additional
military police, combat units, and civil affairs personnel quickly joined the
D-Day force. In all, over 300 airlift missions from CONUS supported the
deployed force in its first ten days,'" not including the 51 aircraft used to
deliver initial combat forces to the theater at H-Hour.'"
JUST CAUSE units also benefitted from a tremendously robust C2
"system. Instantaneous communications were available at all times. Using a
combination of satellite, landline, and radio systems, commanders often
experienced 100% reliable communications.2' Facsimile machines and
computer word processing systems allowed for unprecedented exchange of
orders and messages between units. In the early stages of the operation,
commanders had as many as four redundant communications systems available
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to control the operation. Additionally, the first use of a Joint Communications
Electronics Operating Instructions (JCEOI) codebook allowed for secure
communications across the joint arena.'"'
Obtaining air superiority was never a doubt for the U.S. force as the
enemy could not muster a credible threat. Initial concerns that the PDF bad
obtained SA-7 missiles proved invalid. Known PDF anti-air gun systems were
quickly knocked out during the initial fighting, leaving the enemy with only
small arms to combat the massive U.S. air machine employed. Despite their
air defense weakness, the PDF did inflict considerable damage on U.S.
aircraft, but casuaties and combat losses were low."*
The U.S. force achieved its combat-related objectives in fifteen days.'"
As a result, JUST CAUSE never really tested the operational durability of
U.S. formations. The force did not need an operational pause, nor did it lack
for supplies and manpower. Had the PDF gone to the jungle to fight, the
Americans may have faced a more difficult time. It is doubtful, however, that
the third-rate PDF could have tested the durability of any U.S. combat unit.
The PDF was a marginally distributed enemy. Although equipped with
some modern weapons of war, and trained and organized to engage in modern
combat, it was largely an internal police force with no real ability to engage in
combined arms operations. Yet, despite its weaknesses, the fighting spirit of
some PDF soldiers and noncommissioned officers surprised some American
commanders. The PDF leadership, however, was a tremendously weak link,
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deserting its soldiers at the first signs of trouble.'2
In contrast to the poor leaders in the PDF, the Ameicar, command was
blessed with commanders of operational vision. Generals Thurman, Stiner,
Foss, and others realized the inadequacies of the early BLUE SPOON plan,
and revised it in line with the doctrine of operational art. They developed a
synchronized and intricately detailed operational plan and, despite its
complexity, saw its execution through with speed, precision, and minimal loss
of life. They knew their enemy, found his weaknesses, and struck him with
such sureness of purpose that they eliminated his will to fight.
Finally, Epstein asserts that operational art should create favorable
conditions for the execution of tacticJ operations. In the execution )f
Operation JUST CAUSE we see a fight that was over before it began. The
planning, rehearsals, and leadership of this operational masterpiece clearly
attained asymmetric conditions over the PDF above and beyond that required
to defeat them. The application of operational art, meeting the theoretical
criteria examined above, made Operation JUST CAUSE a quick, decisive
victory.
V. Conclusions
Operation JUST CAUSE was an excellent application of operational art.
Its planners apparently understood existing doctrine and used the art to develop
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a highly effective operational plan that attained the desired strategic goals. The
planners received the visionary guidance of three gifted officers, General
Thurman, LTG Stiner, and LTG Foss. These officers also benefitted from
having leaders in the Joint Chiefs of Staff and the Bush Administration who
gave them their bead and did not tinker with their plan. The result was a
stunning American victory accomplished in short order with minimum
casualties.
Despite their success, the designers of the operation did make mistakes.
Clearly the slow, disjointed start of Operation PROMOTE LIBERTY reveals a
weakness in the application of operational art. USSOUTHCOM did retain the
responsibility for this nation building phase of operations in Panama, but surely
there were those who realized the planning had not proceeded far enough and
should have corrected the situation.
We must not fall into a sense of complacency by this success, for the
U.S. military held almost all the cards in the venture. Blessed with
Panama-based units, facilities, communications, and, most important, a host
population friendly to our cause, success was virtually assured. Additionally,
the enemy U.S. military men and women faced was third-rate and hardly
capable of defending itself against the sudden, swift strike by an
asymmetrically superior American force.
In any event, Operation JUST CAUSE "was clearly a success, even a
masterpiece, of operational art."'' In an era of declining defense dollars,
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uncertain enemies, and global turmoil, we must remember this operation's
lessons well. The force we face tomorrow may not be the pushover we faced
on December 20, 1989. As the American military decreases in size, it must
not lose its fighting edge, and it must not forget the value of applying
operational art in its future endeavors.
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Appendix 1 - Operation Just Cause Task Organization
USSOUTHCOM
JOINT TASK FORCE SOUTH
Taskr Force Pacific Tasik Force Atlantic
82nd Airborne Division 3d Bde (-) 7th Inf Div (L)Ist Bde (+) DRB 4-17th lnf
1-504th PIR 3-504th Inf2-504th PIR4-325th AIR Task Force Bayonet
7th Infantry Division (L) 193d Infantry Bde (L)2d Bde 5-87th Inf
2-27th Inf 1-508th Inf (ABN)3-27th Inf 4-6th Inf (M) 5th Inf Div (M)5-21st lnf 92d MP Bn (Prov)
lst Bde1-9th Inf JSOTF2-9th lnf SOCSOUTH3-9th lnf 3-7th SF Bn
A/1-7th SF BnJCATF 75th Ranger Regt
96th CA Bn (-) 1-75th Rgr Regt2-75th Rgr Regt3-75th Rgr Regt
Joint Intellijence Task Force 7th SF GRP470th MI Bde 1-7th SF Bn
525th MN Bde(-) 2-7th SF Bn160th Spec Opus Avn GP
Joint Psychological _OUs TF Task Force Aviation1-4th Psyop Grp (+) 7th Avn Bde (-)
18th Avn Bde (-)Joint Task Force South Control 1-82d Avn (-)
536th Eng Bn 1-228th Avn16th NMP Bde 1-123d Avn (-)I st COSCOM 3-123d Avn
SOURCE: U.S. Army Combined Arms Center, "Operation Just CauseLessons Learned: Vol I-Il," Bulletin 90-9 (Fort Leavenworth, Kansas: Centerfor Army Lessons Learned, October, 1990), 1-2.
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Appendix 2 - Map of Panama
............ ..........................::. ............................ : SCO&S W"Vus8 10......................
OwbonAress
........................... PA N A M A
... .................. ......
M sdcknLabe
................................................
.......... .......... .. ..... . ..........
........ .........irrea
...........
.. ............... .......
... .... .. ..
........... ...... ... ..... .................................. ............
Source: U.S. Army Combined Arms Command, 00peration JUSTCAUSE Lessons Learned,* Bufletin 9G-9 (Fort Leavenworth, Kansas:Center for Army Lzssons Learned, October 1990), 1-3.
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ENDNOTES
1. James J. Schneider, "The Theory of OperationalArt," Theoretical Paper No. 3 (Fort Leavenworth,Kansas: School of Advanced Military Studies, March 1,1988), 1.
2. Summarized from an introductory essay by Jacob W.Kipp entitled "General-Major A. A. Svechin and ModernWarfare: Military History and Military Theory" as foundin: Aleksandr A. Svechin, S, Editeid by Kent D.Lee. (Minneapolis, Minnesota: East View PLblications,1992), 23 (operational art coined and first zoplicationof the term) and 37-38 (lectures and writings onoperational art).
3. From Kipp essay found in Svechin, 26.
4. Sigismund von Schlichting is a noted Germanmilitary theorist who developed "mission-orientedtactics," as found in Kipp essay in Svechin, 27. VonSchlicting's influence on Svechin is summarized in Kippessay in Svechin, 27-29.
5. Kipp essay in Svechin, 36.
6. Summarized from Kipp essay as found in Svechin, 23-56. See also David M. Glantz article entitled"Introduction: A Framework for Operational Art" asfound in: Ghulam Dastagir Wardak, compiler, Th=Voroshilov Lectures: Materials from the Soviet GeneralStaff Academy. Volume III - Issues of Operational Art(Washington, D.C.: National Defense University Press,1992), 5-7.
7. Wardak, 16-17.
8. Wardak, 17.
9. Wardak, 29.
10. Summary of material contained in Wardak, ChapterOne, 15-49. This chapter stresses the impact ofnuclear warfare throughout its discussion of the Sovietview of operational art.
11. MAJ Paul H. Herbert, Deciding What Has to Be Done:General William E. DePuy and the 1976 Edition of FM100-5. Operations, Leavenworth Papers No. 16 (FortLeavenworth, Kansas: Combat Studies Institute, U.S.Army Command and General Staff College, 1988), 96-97.
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12. FM 100-5, ODerations (Final Draft) (HQ, Departmentof the Army: August 21, 1992), 1.
13. Summarized from FM 100-5, Operations (FinalDraft), 1.
14. Summarized from FM 100-5, Operations (FinalDrmft), 1.
15. Lawrence A. Yates, "Planning: Operation JustCause, December 1989" as found in: Robert J. Spiller,ed., Combined Arms in Battle Since 1939 (FortLeavenworth, Kansas: U.S. Army Command and GeneralStaff College, 1992), 202.
16. Summarized and paraphrased from FM 100-5,Operations (Final Draft), 1-1 to 1-3.
17. FM 100-5, Operations (Final Draft), 2-5.
18. Carl von Clausewitz, On War, Edited and translatedby Michael Howard and Peter Paret (Princeton, NewJersey: Princeton University Press, 1984), 87.
19. Summary of information contained in FM 100-5,ODerations (Final Draftj, 5-2; and AFSC Pub 1, Th=Joint Staff Officer's Guide 1991 (Norfolk, Virginia:National Defense University, October 1991), 5-6 to5-10 and 6-7 to 6-8.
20. FM 100-5, Operations (Final Draft), 5-2.
21. Summarized from FM 100-5, Operations (FinalZA=t, 5-2 and 5-3.
22. Summarized from FM 100-5, Operations (FinalnrAft1, 5-2 and 7-2.
23. James J. Schneider, "Vulcan's Anvil: The AmericanCivil War and the Emergence of Operational Art,"Theoretical Paper No. 4 (Fort Leavenworth, Kansas,School of Advanced Military Studies, June 16, 1991),18.
24. Summary of Clausewitz, 485-486, and 595-597.
25. See FM 100-5, Operations (Final DraftU, 7-9 to7-10 for current doctrinal interpretations of theconcept of center of gravity.
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26. For a discussion of the physical, cybernetic, andmoral domains of war, and the correspondingimplications for maintaining cohesion in the military,see Schneider, "The Theory of Operational Art," 6-7 andfigure 2. For a doctrinal summary on decisive points,see FM 100-5, Operations fFinal Draft), 7-10 to 7-11.
27. Note the word "military" is intentionally excludedbefore the word "force." The organization of forces toaccomplish the mission may well include other elementsof a nation's power, such as economic, political, orsocial. This implies that operational art includes theuse of interagency efforts in the conduct of campaignsand major operations.
28. Paraphrased from Robert M. Epstein, "CourseCommentary: The Historical Practice of OperationalArt," Paper for Course 4, Phase II (Fort Leavenworth,Kansas, School of Advanced Military Studies, 1992),4-11-1; and Schneider, "The Theory of Operational Art,"18.
29. Antoine Henri Jomini, The Art of War in Roots ofStrategy. Book 2 (Harrisburg, Pennsylvania: StackpoleBooks, 1987).
30. Concepts summarized in part from FM 100-5,QOpratgons (Final Draft), 7-9 to 7-10; and Jomini,464-478.
31. Summarized from FM 100-5, C> erations (FinalDraft), 7-11 to 7-14; JCS PUB 3-0, Doctrine for Unifiedand Joint Operations (Test) (Washington, D.C., J7,Joint Staff, January 1990), 111-6; Schneider, "TheTheory of Operational Art," 27-30; and Robert M.Epstein, "Course Commentary: The Historical Practice ofOperational Art," Paper for Course 4, Phase I (FortLeavenworth, Kansas, School of Advanced MilitaryStudies, 1992), 6.
32. Summarized from Schneider, "The Theory ofOperational Art," 16-17.
33. Schneider, "The Theory of Operational Art," 7.
34. Schneider, "Vulcan's Anvil," 38.
35. Attributes found in Schneider, "Vulcan's Anvil,"38-67.
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36. Summarized and paraphrased from Schneider,
"Vulcan's Anvil," 2-11 and 18.
37. Schneider, "Vulcan's Anvil," 39.
38. Summarized and paraphrased from Schneider,"Vulcan's Anvil," 39-40 and 63.
39. Schneider, "Vulcan's Anvil," 45-46.
40. Summarized and paraphrased from Schneider,"Vulcan's Anvil," 45-46 and 55-58.
41. Schneider, "Vulcan's Anvil," 59.
42. Summary of Schneider, "Vulcan's Anvil," 52.
43. Schneider, "Vulcan's Anvil," 66.
44. Epstein, "Course Commentary," Course 4, Phase II,4-14/15-4.
45. Epstein, "Course Commentary," Course 4, Phase I,3.
46. Author's interpretation of Epstein, "CourseCommentary," Course 4, Phase I, 3 and 9; and Epstein,"Course Commentary," Course 4, Phase II, 4-11-1 and4-14/15-4.
47. Frederick Woerner, GEN (USA, Ret), "U.S.-PanamaPolicy," Part 1 of 2, Militar (March 1990): 39.
48. Lorenzo Crowell, "The Anatomy of Just Cause: TheForces Involved, the Adequacy of Intelligence, and ItsSuccess as a Joint Operation," as found in Bruce W.Watson, and Peter G. Touras, eds., Operation JustCauSe: The U.S. Intervention in Panama (Boulder,Colorado: Westview Press, 1991), 50.
Herrera accusations against Noriega summarizedfrom Lawrence A. Yates, "Joint Task Force Panama, JUSTCAUSE-Before and After," Military Review (October1991), 59; and Woerner, "U.S.-Panama Policy," Part 1 of2, 39.
49. Yates, "Joint Task Force Panama," 60.
50. Summarized from Yates, "Joint Task Force Panama,"60; and Yates, "Planning," in Spiller, 197.
51. Woerner, "U.S.-Panama Policy," Part 1 of 2, 39.
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52. Suitmary of information contained in Yates, "JointTask Force Panama," 60; and Susan G. Horwitz,"Indications and Warning Factors," in Watson, 50-51.
51. VLmmary and paraphrase of information found in1E'•w tz article in Watson, 50-53; Yates, "Joint Taskf..,rcv Panama," 60; and William S. Ramshaw, Lt.,"Operation Just Cause Command and Control: A CaseStudy," Master's Thesis (Monterey, California: U.S.Naval Postgraduate School, March 1991), 4.
54. Yates, wJoint Task Force Panama," 60.
55. Yates, "Joint Task Force Panama," 59. Referencemade to JSOTF activation is drawn from Yates,"Planning," in Spiller, 199.
56. Summarized and paraphrased from Yates, "Joint TaskForce Panama," 59, 61, and 65.
57. Summary of information found in Lawrence A. Yates,"Template for War and Peace," Military Review (January1993), 80-81; MG William A. Roosma, Deputy CG, XVIIIAirborne Corps and Joint Task Force-South, interview byDr. Robert K. Wright, Jr., Fort Bragg, North Carolina,March 15, 1990, 1; Thomas M. Donnelly, et. al.,Operation Just Cause: The Storming of Panama (New York:Lexington Books, 1991), 17-18; and MG William M. Matz,Jr., former Assistant Divisitn Commander (Support), 7thInfantry Division (Light), interview by Dr. Robert K.Wright, Jr., Dr. Lawrence A. Yates, and Mr. Joe D.Huddleston, Fort Lewis, Washington, April 30, 1992,2-3.
58. Summary of information contained in Roosmainterview, 6 and 11-12; G-3 Plans Section, XVIIIAirborne Corps, group interview by Dr. Robert K.Wright, Jr., Fort Bragg, North Carolina, March 30,1990, 2-3 and 11; COL(P) Thomas H. Needham, J3, JointTask Force-South, interview by Dr. Robert K. Wright,Jr., Fort Bragg, North Carolina, March 6, 1990, 1;and LTC Timothy McMahon, Director of Plans, XVIIIAirborne Corps and Joint Task Force-South, interview byDr. Lawrence A. Yates, handwritten notes, Fort Clayton,Panama, December 20-21, 1989, 1.
59. Horwitz article in Watson, 53.
60. Summary of Horwitz article in Watson, 53.
61. Horwitz article in Watson, 53.
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62. Summarized from Yates, "Joi.nt Task Force Panama,"66; Ramshaw, 6 and 69; Horwitz urticle in Watson, 53;LTG Carl W. Stiner, Commander, Joint Task Force-South,interview by Dr. Robert K. Wright, Jr., Fort Bragg,North Carolina, March 2, 7, and 27, and June 1, 1990,2; and U.S. Congress, House, Committee on ForeignAffairs, Post-Invasion Panama: Status of DemocraG.q._athe Civilian Casualties CorltrQvL.r (102nd Cong., istsess., Committee Hearing, July 17 and 30, 1991), 105.
63. Summary of information found in Stiner interview,2; G-3 Plans Section group interview, 5; Yates, "JointTask Force Panama," 69; and MAJ David Huntoon, G-3/J-3Plans Officer, XVIII Airborne Corps and Joint TaskForce-South, telephone in erview by Dr. Lawrence A.Yates, handwritten notes, June 27, 1990, 3-4.
64. GEN Frederick Woerner (USA, Ret), "U.S.-PanamaPolicy," Part 2 of 2, Mitary (April 1990): 23.
65. Summarized from Woerner, "U.S.-Panama Policy,"Part 2 of 2, 23-24; and Roosma interview, 13.
66. Summary and paraphrase of information found inYates, "Joint Task Force Panama," 67-68; Ramshaw, 59-60; and COL Michael G. Snell, Commander, 193d InfantryBrigade, interview by Dr. Robert K. Wright, Jr., FortClayton, Panama, January 1, 1990, 1.
67. Summary of information contained in Yates,"Planning," in Spiller, 202; Donnelly, 55; Huntooninterview, 4; McMahon interview, i; Roosma interview,3; and Yates, "Joint Task Force Panama," 69.
68. Summarized from Yates, "Planning," in Spiller,210; Huntoon interview, 2 and 4; and G-3 Plans Sectiongroup interview, 18.
69. Summary of the following: For informationpertaining to the coup attempt, see Snell interview, 1and 10; Horwitz article in Watson, 54; G-3 PlansSection group interview, 7-8; Stiner interview, 5; andRamshaw, 12 and 31. For information concerning theimpact of the coup on planning see the same references,plus McMahon interview, 2; and Huntoon interview, 9.
70. Summarized from McMahon interview, 2-4; Stinerinterview, 6; Huntoon interview, 2 and 4; and Ramshaw,12. Also see Headquarters, United States SouthernCommand, "USCINCSO OPORD 1-90 (BLUE SPOON),"declassified operations order, Quarry Heights,Panama, October 31, 1989, 1. (Hereafter referred to as
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"BLUE SPOON").
71. For a complete task organization see Headquarters,XVIII Airborne Corps, "Joint Task Force-South OPLAN 90-2," declassified operations plan, Fort Bragg, NorthCarolina, November 3, 1989, A-I to A-3. (Hereafterreferred to as "OPLAN 90-2"). See also BLUE SPOON, A-Ito A-5; and Headquarters, Commander Joint SpecialOperations Task Force (COMJSOTF), "COMJSOTF OPORD 1-90(BLUE SPOON)," draft declassified operations order,Fort Bragg, North Carolina, November 7, 1989, 13-16.(Hereafter referred to as "COMJSOTF OPORD 1-90").
72. PDF organizational data is a composite summary ofthe following sources: Donnelly, 75; Crowell article inWatson, 70; Roosma interview, 14; and U.S. Congress,Post Invasion Panama, 106.
73. Headquarters, United States Southern Command,"Command Briefing on Operation Just Cause," paperbriefing slides and narrative, undated, 11. (Hereafterreferred to as "JUST CAUSE Command Briefing").
74. JUST CAUSE Command Briefing, 11; and Stiner
interview, 79.
75. Stiner interview, 35.
76. Summarized and paraphrased from the followingsources: Huntoon interview, 5 (JSOTF exercise and SANDFLEA's revised per OPLAN 90-2); Snell interview, 1, andHorwitz article in Watson, 54 (bomb threat); McMahoninterview, 4, and Huntoon interview, 4-5 (JTFSOpreparations for war); Stiner interview, 5, 7, and 9(improvements in intelligence and exercises conducted);and MG James H. Johnson, Jr., Commander, 82d AirborneDivision, interview by Dr. Robert K. Wright, Jr., FortBragg, North Carolina, March 5, 1990, 3 and 11 (on 82dAirborne Division exercises and helicopterprepositioning).
77. Horwitz article in Watson, 55.
78. Donnelly, 94-95.
79. There were 1,599 treaty violations and 906 otherincidents recorded by USSOUTHCOM in 19P8-1989, perHeadquarters, United States Southern Command,"Operation Just Cause: Rebirth of a Nation," paperbriefing slides, undated, 6.
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80. Most JUST CAUSE-related bibliographic sourcescover events during this timeframe. Sources summarizedand paraphrased in this paragraph include: Stinerinterview, 21; Donnelly, 101; U.S. Congress, Post1nvaioEdnA, 160; and U.S. Congress, Senate,Committee on Armed Services and the Select Committee onIntelligence, 1989 Events in Panama (101st Cong., 1stsess., Joint Committee Hearing, October 6 and 17, 1989and December 22, 1989), 138.
81. Summarized and paraphrased from Stiner interview,46 and 79; Johnson interview, 27; Donnelly, 105-213,and U.S. Congress, House, Committee on Foreign Affairs,DeDlovment of United States Forces to Panama (101stCong., 2nd sess., December 21, 1989 communication fromthe President of the United States to the Speaker ofthe House of Representatives, January 23, 1990), 2.
82. Summarized from the following sources: Snellinterview, 5 (operations after D+1); U.S. Congress,1989 Events in Panama, 119 (hostage incidents) and 126(combat summary); and U.S. Army Command and GeneralStaff College, "Low Intensity Conflict Imperatives andOperations in Panama: May 89 - Jan 91," unpublished,draft briefing prepared by Low Intensity ConflictProponencies Directorate, U.S. Army Combined ArmsCenter, Fort Leavenworth, Kansas, undated, 16 (JUSTCAUSE completed). Other sources of note concerningthis period include: Headquarters, 193d InfantryBrigade, "Summary - Operation Just Cause - 193dInfantry Brigade (Light) (Task Force Bayonet)," type(dafter action review, with tabs, Fort Clayton, Panama,undated, 7; U.S. Congress, Post Invasion Panama, 13-14;and LTG Carmen Cavezza, former CG, 7th InfantryDivision (Light), interview by Dr. Lawrence A. Yates,Dr. Robert K. Wright, Jr., and Mr. Joe D. Huddleston,Fort Lewis, Washington, April 30, 1992, 17. A goodsummary of the entire period after D+1 is found inChapter 16 of Donnelly, 350-379.
83. Reference problems experienced at the start ofPROMOTE LIBERTY: OPLAN 90-2 assumed "extended civil-military operations (CPO) will require mobilization ofreserve component civil affairs personnel." Onlyindividual mobilization occurred. The plan also stated"during the conduct of military operations in the JOA[joint operating area] every effort will be made tominimize commitment of US efforts to support CAoperations." Thus, JTFSO did not plan to play a majorrole in nation-building operations. Instead, theybelieved SOUTHCOM would take complete responsibilityfor the effort. Finally, the BLIND LOGIC plan was not
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mentioned as a reference to the basic plan. See "OPLAN90-2," 2, G-1, and G-3.
Command and control of the Civil MilitaryOperations Task Force (CMOTF) changed four times afterD-Day. From December 26, 1989, to January 1, 1990,JTFSO commanded the CMOTF. From the 2d to the 15th ofJanuary, the J5, USSOUTHCOM controlled CMOTFoperations. Then, until the 23d, Joint Task Force-Panama retained command. Finally, on January 23d, thenewly formed U.S. Military Support Group-Panamacontrolled the CMOTF until the end of Operation PROMOTELIBERTY. As found in: Headquarters, United StatesSpecial Operations Command, "Organization of NationBuilding Forces," memorandum and paper briefing slides,MacDill AFB, Florida, January 8, 1990, 32.
Other sources summarized include: U.S. Congress,Post-Invasion Panama, 113; COL Tom Braaten, Vice J3,and BG William Hartzog, J3, U.S. Southern Command,group interview by Dr. Larry Yates, Quarry Heights,Panama, June 29, 1990. 34; and John T. Fishel, "The Fogof Peace: Planning and Executing the Restoration ofPanama," study for the Strategic Studies Institute,Carlisle Barracks, Pennsylvania, U.S. Army WarCollege, April 15, 1992, 32. Fishel's study is thebest overall source on PROMOTE LIBERTY nation buildingplanning and execution.
84. Paraphrase of FM 100-5, Operations (Final Draft),
5-2.
85. Ramshaw, 71.
86. Stiner interview, 79.
87. Per BLUE SPOON, 2-3, supporting Unified &Specified Commands included Special Operations Command,Atlantic Command, Forces Command, TransportationCommand, and Strategic Air Command. Other departmentsand agencies tasked to support the operation included,but were not limited to, the Department of State, theNational Security Agency, the U.S. Information Agency,the Central Intelligence Agency, the DefenseCommunications Agency, the Defense Logistics Agency,the Defense Mapping Agency, and the DefenseIntelligence Agency.
88. Ramshaw, 1. President Bush, in his initialcommunication to Congress about the operation, statedJUST CAUSE was initiated "to protect American lives, todefend democracy in Panama, to apprehend Noriega andbring him to trial on the drug-related charges for
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which he was indicted in 1988, and to ensure theintegrity of the Panama Canal Treaties," as found inU.S. Congress, Deployment of United States Forces toPa.fnama, 1.
89. BLUE SPOON, 4. Additionally, the CJCS ExecuteOrder to USSOUTHCOM, dated 182325ZDEC89, ordered thecommand to "conduct joint offensive operations toneutralize the PDF and other combatants, as required,so as to protect U.S. lives, property, and interests inPanama, and to assume full exercise of rights accordedby international law and the U.S./Panama treaties," asfound in Headquarters, United States Southern Command,"Operation JUST CAUSE: Rebirth of a Nation," 19.
90. BLUE SPOON, 4. This paragraph clearly reflectsU.S. modifications to BLUE SPOON following the October1989 coup attempt. The mission to "be prepared tosupport Panamanian initiatives with militaryoperations" shows the desire of military leaders to usefuture coup attempts as a basis for U.S. action (inpart to avoid further Congressional criticisms ofmilitary operations in Panama). Also the desire to"fix" the PDF relates to keeping those units thatsupported Noriega during the coup out of the fight,while "neutralize the PDFP refers to Panamanian forcesas a whole. Finally, U.S. knowledge of PDF plansGENESIS and EXODUS serve as a basis for the "beprepared" mission to "rescue any USCITs detained by thePDF." Undoubtedly, previous PDF harrassment ofAmericans, including episodes of short-term detentionof U.S. military and civilian personnel, lentcredibility to these plans.
91. Summarized from BLUE SPOON, 7-10 (SpecificTaskings) and 12 (Civil Affairs).
92. OPLAN 90-2, 3.
93. Summarized from OPLAN 90-2, 5-11; and COMJSOTFOPORD 1-90, 39-50.
94. Bernard E. Trainor, "Hundreds of Tips but Still NoNoriega," New York Times (December 23, 1989): 13. MGRoosma credits Thurman with identifying Noriega as thestrategic center of gravity, per Roosma interview, 18.
95. Stiner interview, 3.
96. Summarized from G-3 Plans Section, groupinterview, 25; McMahon interview, 3; Johnson interview,2; and Stiner interview, 3.
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97. Summary of information contained in Stinerinterview, 3 and 18; Johnson interview, 32; Needhaminterview, 14; Roosma interview, 18, and G-3 PlansSection, group interview, 25, 29, and 32.
98. Stiner stated, "I was not constrained," when askedto describe the constraints he was operating under inplanning the operation. See Stiner interview, 10.
99. Summarized from Stiner interview, 6-7; Johnsoninterview, 11; and G-3 Plans Section, group interview,18.
100. David Ignatius, "Panama: This Mop-up Could TakeUs Years," Washington Post (December 24, 1989), C1.
101. For an interesting account of the post-invasionrequirements for using former PDF members in the newgovernment, see Headquarters, Joint Task Force-South,(Meeting Notes - 251030 DEC 1989], typed notes from ameeting between Commander, Joint Task Force-South,and Panamanian Vice President (Dr.) Arias Calderon, et.al., Fort Clayton, Panama, December 25, 1989.
102. "The commanders of Operation JUST CAUSE tookextensive measures to minimize Panamanian casualties
in many cases these measures placed U.S. lives atrisk. From the beginning of planning, a guidingprinciple was the safety of non-combatants." From astatement by BG James R. Harding, Director, Inter-American Region, Office of the Assistant Secretary ofDefense, Inter-American Affairs on July 30, 1991, asfound in U.S. Congress, Post-Invasion Panama, 147.
103. OPLAN 90-2, C-7-5 and C-7-6.
104. OPLAN 90-2, Annex C, Appendix 7. For detailedcoverage of ROE changes and their impact on the forcesee 1LT Clarence E. Briggs III, Operation Just Cause:Panama. December 1989: A Soldier's Eyewitness Account(Harrisburg, Pennsylvania: Stackpole Books, 1990),94-121, and 140-143.
105. Summarized from Stiner interview, 13; and Needhaminterview, 2.
106. Summarized from Matz interview, 11; Stinerinterview, 26-27; and Ramshaw, 70.
107. Stiner interview, 79.
108. Johnson interview, 2; Snell interview, 2.
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109. Paraphrase of G-3 Plans Section, group interview,10. For a listing of offensive and defensive missionsassigned to various JTFSO units, see OPLAN 90-2, 6-10,and Annex C, Appendix 1.
110. Donnelly, 105.
111. Summary and author's interpretation of G-3 PlansSection, group interview, 29-30; and Stiner interview,3 and 42-43.
112. G-3 Plans Section, group interview, 25.
113. Summarized from Stiner interview, 46; Snellinterview, 4; and Johnson interview, 27.
114. G-3 Plans Section, group interview, 42-46.
115. Stiner interview, 28-30.
116. Johnson interview, 21.
117. McMahon interview, 6.
118. Trainor, 13.
119. See note 83.
120. Matz interview, 20-21.
121. Snell interview, 11.
122. Ramshaw, 76.
123. Johnson interview, 16.
124. MG Roosma claimed he had "100% communications"with the force. He also added, "In thirty-one years ofservice I have never, ever had that." Roosmainterview, 29.
125. Summary of information found in Stiner interview,12 and 28; G-3 Plans Section, group interview, 14 and26; Ramshaw, 96-97; and Needham interview, 10.
126. Noris Lyn McCall, "Assessing the Role of AirPower," as found in Watson, 118-119.
127. Noriega surrendered to U.S. forces on January 3,1990, thus completing the last major operationalobjective of JTFSO forces. Watson, 219.
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128. Summarized and paraphrased from Johnsoninterview, 32; Snell interview, 14; Stiner interview,34 and 36; and Donnellyf 401.
129. Donnelly, 398.
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Schneider, James J. "The Loose Marble-and the Origins of Operational Art.*ftamclr (March 1989): 85-99.
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Woerner, Frederick, GEN (USA, Ret). "U.S.-Panama Policy." Part I of 2.
Miiita (March 1990): 38+.
"U.S.-Panama Policy.* Part 2 of 2. MiliW= (April 1990): 23+.
Yates, Lawrence A. "Joint Task Force Panama, JUST CAUSE-Before andAfter." Militr Review (October 1991): 58-71.
"" Template for War and Peace." Miti&=..Reie (January
1993): 80-82.
The New York Times (New York, New York), December 23 and 25, 1989;January 16, 1990.
Twic Time (Quarry Heights, Panama), December 27 and 29, 1989; January3, 5, 8, and 12, 1990.
The WI hinWn Post (Washington, D.C.), December 24, 1989; January 25
and May 31, 1990.
Stndent mhlhs 20dI e
BaggoU., MAJ Christopher L. "Achieving the Operational End-State: TheLinkage of Military Operations with Regional Strategy." Monograph forthe School of Advanced Military Studies. Fort Leavenworth, Kansas, May1991.
Mornston, MAN Harry E. "Training Focus for the 1990s: ContingencyOperations." Monograph for the School of Advanced Military Studies.Fort Leavenworth, Kansas, May 1991.
Pickar, MAJ Charles K. "Blitzkrieg: Operational Art or Tactical Craft?"Monograph for the School of Advanced Military Studies. FortLeavenworth, Kansas, May 1992.
Ramshaw, Lt. William S. *Operation Just Cause Command and Control: ACase Study." Master's Thesis for the U.S. Naval Postgraduate Schvol.Monterey, California, March 1991.
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Swan, MM Robin P. 'The Pieces of a Military Chessboard - What is theContemporary Significance of Jomini's Design of a Theater Operations?"Monograph for the School of Advanced Military Studies. FortLeavenworth, Kansas, May 1991.
Umgnblished BUMes n Memorand=
Benjamin, LCDR Justis Jr. "United States Intervention in Panama: TheBattle Continues." Paper for the Operations Dqe met, Naval WarCollege. Newport, Rhode Island, February 11, 1991. ( DTIC microficheAD-A236-727).
Epstein, Robert M. 'Course Commentary: The Historical Practice ofOperational Art.* Paper for Course 4, Phase I, for the School ofAdvanced Military Studies. Fort Leavenworth, Kansas, 1992.
. 'Course Commentary: The Historical Practice of OperationalArt. Paper for Course 4, Phase I1, for the School of Advanced MilitaryStudies. Fort Leavea ,, Kansas, 1992.
____ 'The Different Levels of War in the Napoleonic Period-Austerlitzand Friedland.' Paper for the School of Advanced Military Studies. FortLeavenworth, Kansas, 1989.
Headquarters, United States Southern Command. 'Command Briefing onOperation Just Cause.' Paper briefing slides and narrative, undated[produced in early January 19901. (Copy, Department of Joint andCombined Operations, U.S. Command and General Staff College, FortLeavenworth, Kansas).
Headquarters, United States Southern Command. *Operation Just Cause:Rebirth of a Nation." Paper briefing slides, undated. (Copy, Departmentof Joint and Combined Operations, U.S. Command and General StaffCollege, Fort Leavenworth, Kansas).
Schneider, James J. 'The Eye of Minerva: The Origin, Nature, and Purposeof Military Theory and Doctrine.' Theoretical Paper No. 5 for the Schoolof Advanced Military Studies. Fort Leavenworth, Kansas, May 17, 1992.
"" 'The Theory of Operational Art.' Theoretical Paper No. 3 forthe School of Advanced Military Studies. Fort Leavenworth, Kansas,March 1, 1988.
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_ ._ "Vulcan's Anvil: The American Civil War and the Emergence of
Operational Art.' Theoretical Paper No. 4 for the School of AdvancedMilitary Studies. Fort Leavenworth, Kansas, June 16, 1991.
U.S. Army Command and General Staff College. "Low Intensity ConflictImperatives and Operations in Panama: May 89 - Jan 91." Unpublished,draft briefing prepared by Low Intensity Conflict Proponencies Directorate,U.S. Army Combined Arms Center, Fort Leavenworth, Kansas, undated.
Walczak, COL Alexander M. "Conflict Termination - Transitioning fromWarrior to Constable: A Primer.' A Study project for the U.S. Army WarCollege. Carlisle Barracks, Pennsylvania, April 15, 1992. (DTICmicrofiche AD-A251-158).
Braaten, COL Tom, Vice J3, and BG William Hartzog, J3, U.S. SouthernCommand. Group interview by Dr. Larry Yates. Quarry Heights,Panama, June 29, 1990.
US- Army Command and General Staff CollegeCombat Studies Institnte - Inst Cau=e ArChiv
U.S GovernmAnt Documents
Headquarters, 193d Infantry Brigade. "Summary - Operation Just Cause -193d Infantry Brigade (Light) (Task Force Bayonet)." Typed after actionreview, with tabs. Fort Clayton, Panama, undated.
Headquarters, United States Southern Command. "USCINCSO OPORD 1-90(BLUE SPOON)." Declassified operations order. Quarry Heights,PAnama, October 30, 1989.
Headquarters, XVIII Airborne Corps. 'Joint Task Force-South OPLAN 90-2.'Declassified operations plan. Fort Bragg, North Carolina, November 3,1989.
Unpublished Papers and Memorandums
Headquarters, 193d Infantry Brigade. 'Task Force Bayonet Summary ofOperation Just Cause." Handwritten and typed briefing notes. FortClayton, Panama, undated.
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Headquartcrs, Commander Joint Special Operations Task Force (COMJSOTF)."COMJSOTF OPORD 1-90 (BLUE SPOON)." Draft declassifiedoperations order, less Annexes B, and D-X, and less appendices to AnnexC. Fort Bragg, North Carolina, November 7, 1989.
Headquarters, Joint Task Force-South. [Meeting Notes - 251030 DEC 1989].Typad notes from a meeting between Commander, Joint Task Force-South,and Panamanian Vice President (Dr.) Arias Calderon, et. al., FortClayton, Panama, December 25, 1989.
HLadquarters, United States Military Support Group. "Public ForcesProgram.* Memorandum for the Commanding General, Joint Task Force-Panama. Fort Amador, Panama, 26 January 1990.
Headquarters, United States South,- Command. "CMOTF OPORD 1-88(BLIND LOGIC)." Draft dei.-, .ied operations order. Quarry Heights,Panama, August 15, 1988.
Headquarters, United States Special Operations Command. "Organization ofNation Building Forces." Memorandum and paper briefing slides.MacDill AFB, Florida, January 8, 1990.
Oral Min= Interviews
Cavezza, LTG Carmen, former CG, 7th Infantry Division(Light). Interview by Dr. Lawrence A. Yates, Dr. Robert K. Wright, Jr.,and Mr. Joe D. Huddleston. Fort Lewis, Washington, April 30, 1992.(JCIT 097Z).
G-3 Plans Section, XVIII Airborne Corps. Group interview byDr. Robert K. Wright, Jr. Fort Bragg, North Carolina, March 30, 1990.(JCIT 040).
Hale, COL David R. E., Comnumder, I st Brigade, 7th InfantryDivision. Interview by Bob Britton, staff writer for Panorama. Fort Ord,Californ , February 10, 1990.
Huntoon, MAJ David, G-3/J-3 Plans Officer, XVIII AirborneCorps and Joint Task Force-South. Telephone interview by Dr Lawrence A.Yates. Handwritten notes. June 27, 1990.
Johnson, MG James H., Jr., Commander, 82d AirborneDivision. Interview by Dr. Robert K. Wright, Jr. Foir Bragg, NorthCarolina, March 5, 1990. (JCIT 026).
Koren, LTC Henry L. T., Jr., Deputy Reginental Commander,75th Ranger Regiment. Interview by MAJ Larry G. Heystik. Fort Benning,Georgia, ur, dated.
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Matz, MG William M. Jr., former Assistant DivisionCommander (Support), 7th Infantry Division (Light). Interview by Dr. RobertK. Wright, Jr., Dr. Lawrence A. Yates, and Mr. Joe D. Huddleston. FortLewis, Washington, April 30, 1992. (JCIT 098Z).
McMahon, LTC Timothy, Director of Plans, XVIII AirborneCorps and Joint Task Force-South. Interview by Dr. Lawrence A. Yates.Handwritten notes. Fort Clayton, Panama, December 20-21, 1989.
Moore, LTC Lynn D., Commander, 3d Battalion, 504th InfantryRegiment. Interview by Dr. Robert K. Wright, Jr. Fort Bragg, NorthCarolina, May 29, 1990. (JCIT 077).
Needham, COL(P) Thomas H., J3, Joint Task Force-South.Interview by Dr. Robert K. Wright, Jr. Fort Bragg, North Carolina, March6, 1990. (JCIT 027).
Roosma, MG William A., Deputy CG, XVIII Airborne Corpsand Joint Task Force-South. Interview by Dr. Robert K. Wright, Jr. FortBragg, North Carolina, March 15, 1990. (JCIT 025).
Snell, COL Michael G., Commander, 193d Infantry Brigade.Interview by Dr. Robert K. Wright, Jr. Fort Clayton, Panama, January 1,1990. (JCIT 007).
Stiner, LTG Carl W., Commander, Joint Task Force-South.Interview by Dr. Robert K. Wright, Jr. Fort Bragg, North Carolina, March2, 7, and 27, and June 1, 1990. (JCIT 024).
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